I have assembled the crankcases now, I had to wait a long time to get my crankshaft from Eastwood racing not their fault, they stripped my crank 3 weeks ago and when reassembling the new conrod discovered there was a roller missing from the kit, so I had to contact the company I got the rod from to send a replacement, the first one they sent was the wrong size but they got it right in the end. The only major problem I had during reassembly was as I torqued the cases down the shaft got tight, It took some head scratching, and I thought the only variable was the new bearings, but I looked, and they looked fine. Suzanne disagreed and said there was a very slight gap (I installed the bearings by putting the crank in the freezer for 6 hours and heating the bearings to 125'c they slide straight on) not quite far enough as it turned out. The remedy was simple. I cut some pipe that fit the inner race of the bearing to 60mm length, cut a square plate to fit over the top of the pipe with a hole drilled in the center and used the flywheel bolt to gently pull the crank into the bearing, it only moved a fraction but it did the trick. Crank now spins freely and all the gears are selectable, thats as much of the engine as im going to do for now as the rest will be built up when the bottom end is back in the newly rebuilt frame
[attachment deleted by admin]